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you dreamin if you think humans are moving UP^^^^^ Couple weeks ago i stopped to put gas in my truck. Long azz line. I couldn't figure out what happened. I walk in the building i see this long line in there too. People standing around. All kinds of people. Cashier looks at me and asks if i am paying with cash. I said yes. She calls me up to the counter. Everyone else is looking. The manager is telling them "we should have this sorted out in a few more minutes and we apologize" or something to that extent. While i am paying the cashier i ask her what what was going on.
She tells me the credit/debit card interface or something went down.

no chit.....
 
you dreamin if you think humans are moving UP^^^^^ Couple weeks ago i stopped to put gas in my truck. Long azz line. I couldn't figure out what happened. I walk in the building i see this long line in there too. People standing around. All kinds of people. Cashier looks at me and asks if i am paying with cash. I said yes. She calls me up to the counter. Everyone else is looking. The manager is telling them "we should have this sorted out in a few more minutes and we apologize" or something to that extent. While i am paying the cashier i ask her what what was going on.
She tells me the credit/debit card interface or something went down.

no chit.....
Ain't the basics beautiful!
 
not to say ipads are inevitably bad. They are cheaper than books over all, information updated and kept readily at the finger tips more easily. Hopefully some day they or a similar device can replace the brick and mortar structure and bussing for many students. So less teachers, less bussing, less cost, more time learning. Welcome to the new age. I believe a balance is important though. Keeping it down to earth. Dependency can be a horrendous thing. The luddites aren't totally wrong.
 
you dreamin if you think humans are moving UP^^^^^ Couple weeks ago i stopped to put gas in my truck. Long azz line. I couldn't figure out what happened. I walk in the building i see this long line in there too. People standing around. All kinds of people. Cashier looks at me and asks if i am paying with cash. I said yes. She calls me up to the counter. Everyone else is looking. The manager is telling them "we should have this sorted out in a few more minutes and we apologize" or something to that extent. While i am paying the cashier i ask her what what was going on.
She tells me the credit/debit card interface or something went down.

no chit.....
Ain't the basics beautiful!
meh... In some ways it is progress, in some ways regress. Still waiting for the day the northeast power grid goes down. Far as the ipads. The initial studies in education "look" positive. Stuff like this isn't determined in a few years though i don't think? Usually they are reflected a decade to two later in hindsight. Too early to tell. TBD (to be determined). We won't really know for years the end result. Far as moving into the "new economy". The luddites were right in a way on that too. Not everyone is going to be a software engineer. More advanced we become, less people are required to produce goods and services. So if you are looking to employ people technology in general is counter productive to that. If you are looking to educate them, that is something else. Education and advancement DOES NOT = work. Which is fine but admitting that is the first step. :icon_mrgreen: Total opposites. In the new economy most populations will need less than 30 percent of it working. Increase in efficiency. So the educators really need to decide what they are teaching and training the kids for. And they need something better than just "employment".
 
Talking of slide rules, my new watch arrived today and it has a slide rule bessel, a lovely RAF Red Arrows limited edition
 
you dreamin if you think humans are moving UP^^^^^ Couple weeks ago i stopped to put gas in my truck. Long azz line. I couldn't figure out what happened. I walk in the building i see this long line in there too. People standing around. All kinds of people. Cashier looks at me and asks if i am paying with cash. I said yes. She calls me up to the counter. Everyone else is looking. The manager is telling them "we should have this sorted out in a few more minutes and we apologize" or something to that extent. While i am paying the cashier i ask her what what was going on.
She tells me the credit/debit card interface or something went down.

no chit.....
Oh, look! An exception to the rule! Well, in that case, stop the world! Everyone needs to stop using electronic forms of payment immediately and switch back to cash because there was a payment hiccup at a gas station!

Never mind the fact that literally millions of electronic transactions go through every day without a hitch quicker and easier than some old lady ahead of you digging through her purse, counting out bills, then digging some more to find her change purse, and counting out change to the exact penny. While we're at it, let's find the exceptions that make us think we should all go back to Kodachrome, adding machines, horse and carriage, buggy whips, VHS, and a thousand other things that make somebody out there sad that they got replaced.
 
But still, e-books cost less than paper books, especially when you factor in the costs of manufacturing, warehousing, transport to schools, and disposal at the end of their short lifespans.
Granted, however I was meaning the cost to the consumer/student; the difference between electronic and paper books is minimal, at least in the Canadian system. It may be different in your area. The other point is: There's no such thing as a second-hand e-book.
So, you only want to look at one cost in order to try to claim that e-books aren't cheaper, when in fact they are anyway, and you don't want to bring in all of the associated costs collectively. And I should take this argument from you seriously... ummm... why?

Comparing it to the current electronic disposal methods in Asia is invalid for the simple fact that a wrong over there doesn't turn a wrong over here into a right. The current disposal methods in Asia need to stop, and as soon as you rule Asia, you can put that on your agenda. As long as it continues though, it doesn't make paper mill pollution "right" or valid in any way.
I'm not suggesting for a second that pollution in any form is 'right', or that one is better than another. I am stating however, that the pollution arising from the North American/European production of text-books and paper-based educational material is many orders of magnitude less harmful than the south-east Asian production/ of electronics. The reality of the situation is, regardless of western views, most of this processing does, and will continue to occur in south-east Asia simply because of cheap labour and lax environmental standards. Like it or lump it... it is.
My point stands, and now you acknowledge it: It's not going to stop, whether you like paper books better or not. It's not an either / or choice of one evil over another. In the end, the writing is on the wall: Paper books will be replaced by e-books just as digital sensors are replacing film, just as digital recorders and players have replaced tape camcorders and VHS players, and so forth. There's no stopping it, so the best bet is to learn how to best deal with it, not try to turn the tide with a bucket at the beach while whining about how you don't like it.

The electronics are going to keep getting produced, used and discarded. That's reality. The world is not going to suddenly abandon electronic devices and shift back to paper and ink just because Asia is disposing of them in horribly pollutive ways, so you're just going to have to deal with it. News flash: We're not going back to the horse and buggy in order to curtail all the pollution associated with modern powered vehicles either, so take a deep breath, pull up your big boy pants, and figure out how to live with those kinds of facts.
Really? YOu need to add remarks like those? I'm well aware that electronics are here to stay; I'm a user of technology myself, and I don't dispute the value of it. I do dispute wisdom of educational systems which fail to teach the basics such as "times tables" and other basic arithmatic, as well as cursive writing.
First, you haven't shown objectively that "times tables" are NOT being taught. Second, you haven't shown objectively that they NEED to be taught in the modern age, any more than how to use a slide rule needs to be taught to every school child in the modern age where it's far less important.

I realize from the continued rhetoric that surrounds these types of discussions that some of you seem to think that suddenly electrons will cease to flow, and all electronic devices will fail to work, and we'll overnight be thrust back into a pre-industrial civilization, but you haven't shown objectively that such is a realistic outlook for the future either.

If you have a problem with what the schools teach, then get involved with others in the community and correct it. The decisions regarding what to teach and why are made by local school boards.
Again, that may be true where you live, for those of us living in North Igloo Junction, the curriculum is a provincial matter. Even the provinicial teacher's federation has problems making changes, but I don't dispute your point. I choose not to tilt at that particular windmill simply because I have no horse in the race, and thus other than the extorting of funds from me through taxiation, it matters not a whit.
So, are you actually trying to tell me that Canadians have no say in their own educational system? I can understand that there may be a different hierarchy to get there, but you're making noises like Canadian citizens have no say at all in the matter. Seriously?

It's all well and good to cry that we don't teach kids how to use a slide rule. But it's hypocritical when NOBODY NEEDS to use one anymore and EVERYONE, including you, uses a calculator. And like it or not, it's the same with every other technology that's replaced the older ways of doing things.
I don't recall mentioning slide-rules...
They were brought up by someone else in the thread, and they make a good placeholder example of what we're talking about here, which is the replacement of old technology with new, how it will march forward like it or not, and what that means for everyone.

My daughter knows how to do math without a calculator on a napkin, just like I do. She learned it in school, just like I did. My grandaughter is already learning the same thing now in kindergarten and she's all excited about it. Her latest "game" to play with us is what she calls "equals". We take turns asking each other what a number plus another number equals, and then she works it out WITHOUT A CALCULATOR.
Then you sir, are a good parent, and have done her a service that far too many modern parents fail to! I say that in complete sincerity!
I'm not the one that taught her that stuff. The public schools she attended taught her that stuff. I was on the road chasing my career and paying for everything her entire childhood, having her only during the summers and at Christmas. We did not spend that limited time together in "Buck's Math Class 101".

In other words, you missed again.

As far as I can tell, this idea that nobody in the younger generation knows how to do simple maths without a calculator is just more rhetoric from you folks trying to make an argument that modern technology is so much worse than the tech us older folks learned to use. Do they get it drilled in as much as we did? No, but then again, electronic calculators didn't exist when I was learning it, so they HAD to drill it into me and my peers.
No, it's not a lot of rhetoric, at least not in Canada. When I was teaching basic trades training to new sailors fresh out of basic training (about ten years ago), one of the phases of training involved a great deal of what I would call "moderate mental math" and the ability to calculate an equation which was, more or less, a two digit number divided by 60 and mulipled by either 1/4, 1/2 or 3/4. I typically needed to spend at least a half-day going over HOW to do these calculations, and this for people who were, on average, no more than three years out of high-school!
Apparently Canadians are far more ignorant that I'd realized. Thanks for clearing that up.

Look, it's no secret that certain skills are not drilled into every kid in the educations systems these days. There are practical reasons in terms of time and money why not every kid needs to know how to do the kind of math you're talking about anymore, along with a whole host of other things we learned at a time when things were different and we DID generally need those skills to function in most jobs at the time. Those that do need those skills because of career choices in the modern era learn them later as necessary to actually work in those careers.

Whether YOU think that's good or bad is pointless. It is what it is, and if parents want different things to be concentrated on, like doing that kind of math in one's head or on a napkin, then they need to get involved to change it (except in Canada, where the citizens have no say at all in the matter apparently). That's really all there is to it.

You can say you think it's bad, but have you conducted the objective scientific studies to show it as conclusive? No. You base it solely on your gut feeling that it's "bad", probably because it's not what YOU learned, disregarding the fact that the objective TODAY is not to prepare students to enter into the job markets of yesteryear. Education standards aren't formed in a gut-feeling-bubble either, and I think it's important to point that out. There actually ARE people who conduct objective scientific studies associated with education and make their educated recommendations based on the results and conclusions.

Do you REALLY think it matters so much HOW we get to a math answer, as long as we get to it? Do you really think that the whole point of doing math is to do math, or is the point of doing it to get to an answer that is useful for some purpose? If you think it's the former, then why do you use a calculator, a spreadsheet or a database? Why aren't YOU using a slide rule, if it's so all-fired important these days? Why aren't YOU doing all your calculations with pencil and paper if that's the ONLY valid way to get to an answer?
Just stop, already. If you want to go back to banging rocks together, be my guest, but stop wagging your finger at those of us who are eager to move up to the next step in human knowledge and ability.
Again, is it really necessary to add the belittling remarks? I'm not at all adverse to technology, nor advancement. I'm well aware that the slide-rule has been replaced, and I don't think for a second that it's a bad thing. My point was that schools, especially at the junior levels should be concentrating on basics. Providing the children a foundation on which to grow their knowledge, and I don't think that foundation necessarily needs to start off with iPads.
Prove objectively WHY, and show those objective reasons to the people in your country to prove why you're right and they're wrong. Or, if you don't have such a leg to stand on, perhaps you should sit down.

And you actually tried to sidestep my questions. Why DON'T you use those older methods of getting to the answers? Why DO you use modern technology INSTEAD? Let's examine that, seriously. I want to know specifically WHY YOU feel you NEED to be able to do long division on a napkin when YOU never NEED to actually do that anymore. You would be hard-pressed to find a human being over the age of about 10 in North America who does not have a calculator within immediate reach, probably in their pocket or purse or on their hip or already in their hand. They don't NEED a napkin OR the skills to work math out on one.

There was a time when you and I NEEDED that ability, but we don't NEED it anymore, and our children don't NEED it any more than we do anymore. There was a time when the general public NEEDED to know how to care for their horse, but that time has passed, so we don't teach it anymore. Is it a good thing to know? Sure, and some still need that skill. But we have limited resource in terms of time and money to teach our youth, and it needs to be well spent on things they will really NEED.

e-books are here to stay, and I think that's really the bottom line of this conversation. As they replace paper books for very good reasons, Luddites kicking and whining over it notwithstanding, "forcing" their use at $25 per year on people who can easily afford that low cost, while providing them to lower income folks at less or no cost is really no different nor more outrageous or exorbitant than "forcing" families to buy and provide any other basic school supplies, including, in many cases in the past, paper textbooks. That was always especially true in higher education, where such paper textbooks easily cost hundreds of dollars EACH.

A simple look on Amazon at the price of a paper book vs. its e-book version shows the direction this is all going. I always go for the e-book if it's available, and fewer aren't available in that format each day. First, it's cheaper. Second, I can carry and access my entire library with me wherever I go with zero effort. I don't NEED a paper book anymore, let alone stacks and bookshelves full of them.
 
...and, most particular to you, some level of IDIOCY because they'll no longer be able to function at basic levels - BECAUSE OF TABLETS if you're addressing the THREAD THEME.
I don't really think a different viewpoint calls for a term such as "idiocy"....
Perhaps "ignorance" works better for you?

... You folks have YET to show actual causation between tablet use and any of your asserted outcomes due to them.
I am not against the use of tablets, I am against the mandated use of tablets and against the thought of them somehow being considered essential. Nice to have? Yes. Beneficial? I suppose. Essential? Sorry, don't buy it.
It doesn't matter if you buy it or not. It's still reality that e-books are replacing paper books, for very good, practical reasons, and that means having devices capable of reading them. Lots of things in schools, especially in the way of supplies, are mandated, so it's not like it's unprecedented.

That said, yes they are becoming essential, like it or not, agree with it or not. Good luck figuring out how to deal with that reality.
 
E books will never do away with paper books and digital has not done away with film
 
E books will never do away with paper books and digital has not done away with film
...yet.

"Never"? You make me laugh at your Luddite-powered naiveté. Go shoot some Kodachrome. :D
In the outback where you live it maybe hard to get film but not where I live, I prefer the look of film and there are lots like me
 
While technology, especially everything connected to the internet, is an amazing and empowering tool (or sets of tools), it's not without its drawbacks. Chief among them is losing the link to the underlying principles, techniques, processes. Perhaps that is not an issue for most, but the losing the ability to make that link, makes us more vulnerable in case of disruption.

An example of this is navigation using GPS vs. the skills of map reading and dead reckoning. The GPS gives extremely good positional accuracy, excellent tools for knowing the speed, altitude, direction of intended travel, and position on a map. With the right maps loaded into the unit, a variety of ways exist to plot one's route (by vehicle or on foot). And yet, instructors in navigation classes usually insist on the students learning the older methods of determining and tracking position, for times that the electronic equipment fails (for whatever reason), or cannot obtain a proper reading. In this case, context is important. Losing the GPS while travelling in a car in an urban area may be an inconvenience, but losing GPS positioning while kayaking in the wilderness may be fatal.

Technology is not limited to electronic devices. The food that the majority of us eat has been processed extensively. We gain access, variety, convenience, cost reduction, and in some cases, better nutrition. But the flip side is that we know much less about how our foods are produced (antibiotics and hormones in meat? pesticides and GMO in our grains and fruits and veggies?), we are more dependent on transport and processing (which has an impact on the environment), and the industrialization of our food often supports business models that we may not be comfortable with if we know more about how that food is grown or processed. This has been acknowledged by people pushing food independence, or at least self-reliance, which tries to link the food we eat to known sources and processes that we, as consumers, are more comfortable with. It IS about choices. Out of these considerations, come approaches such as the 100-mile diet, slow-cooking, organic and urban farming.

Technology is also affecting the way we interact with each other. Whether one acknowledges it or not, having a smart-phone present usually changes the dynamic with the person you're with. There are times when this is fine. There are times when it is just inappropriate. We're still learning how to determine when we should modify our own behavior. One very clear example, is the use of cellphones while driving. By now, most jurisdictions have a prohibition against cell-phone use (with the usual exception of hands-free) while driving a vehicle. Most people that I know ignore those rules.

"Progress" will happen. What we need to do is figure out how to incorporate it so that we can still hold on to stuff that we consider important.
 
E books will never do away with paper books and digital has not done away with film
...yet.

"Never"? You make me laugh at your Luddite-powered naiveté. Go shoot some Kodachrome. :D
In the outback where you live it maybe hard to get film but not where I live, I prefer the look of film and there are lots like me
I repeat: Go shoot some Kodachrome.

In fact, do that while you're ignoring how many types and quantities of film are no longer produced, and how it will continue to dwindle every year. As fewer Luddites survive a continued interest to buy and use it, profit margins will decrease necessitating an increase in price in order to justify the continued manufacture of it. As price increases, fewer Luddites will justify it, and the spiral away from film will continue. At some point, it will simply not be cost-effective to produce film.

Not saying that happens next year or even in the next 5 years. But it's coming. Film type after film type will bite the dust because of a lack of interested buyers. Eventually, the day will arrive when the announcement is made that the last runs of films will be produced on X date, just like the news of the collapse of Kodachrome. Feel free to be shocked when that happens, just like those who were aghast at the announcement of Kodachrome, even though few of them were actually using it anymore, which was the whole reason it collapsed.

Ignore that reality all you like. It doesn't affect me at all whether you can emotionally deal with it or not.

And now you've got this thread right were you want it - in an argument about film vs digital.

Carry on. :)
 
The idea that the human race as a whole will no longer be able to do long division on a napkin or read a map or any of the other examples presented in this thread is kind of ridiculous, tbh imho. Not everyone will be able to do it, but realistically, not everyone was able to do it anyway, even when it was being drilled into us all.

Those who need those skills learn them. It's always been thus.
 
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